Psychometric properties of a condition-specific PROM for the psychosocial consequences of Labelling hypertension by using Rasch analysis

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Psychometric properties of a condition-specific PROM for the psychosocial consequences of Labelling hypertension by using Rasch analysis. / Gyuricza, János Valery; Christensen, Karl Bang; d’Oliveira, Ana Flávia Pires Lucas; Brodersen, John.

In: Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes, Vol. 5, No. 1, 19, 12.2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Gyuricza, JV, Christensen, KB, d’Oliveira, AFPL & Brodersen, J 2021, 'Psychometric properties of a condition-specific PROM for the psychosocial consequences of Labelling hypertension by using Rasch analysis', Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes, vol. 5, no. 1, 19. https://doi.org/10.1186/s41687-021-00291-4

APA

Gyuricza, J. V., Christensen, K. B., d’Oliveira, A. F. P. L., & Brodersen, J. (2021). Psychometric properties of a condition-specific PROM for the psychosocial consequences of Labelling hypertension by using Rasch analysis. Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes, 5(1), [19]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s41687-021-00291-4

Vancouver

Gyuricza JV, Christensen KB, d’Oliveira AFPL, Brodersen J. Psychometric properties of a condition-specific PROM for the psychosocial consequences of Labelling hypertension by using Rasch analysis. Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes. 2021 Dec;5(1). 19. https://doi.org/10.1186/s41687-021-00291-4

Author

Gyuricza, János Valery ; Christensen, Karl Bang ; d’Oliveira, Ana Flávia Pires Lucas ; Brodersen, John. / Psychometric properties of a condition-specific PROM for the psychosocial consequences of Labelling hypertension by using Rasch analysis. In: Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes. 2021 ; Vol. 5, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{53d3c28a4c404a24a10a3b4aa451f1a6,
title = "Psychometric properties of a condition-specific PROM for the psychosocial consequences of Labelling hypertension by using Rasch analysis",
abstract = "Background: A previous qualitative assessment of the psychosocial consequences of labelling hypertension describes the diagnosis of hypertension as a labelling event with potential unintended negative long-term psychosocial consequences (labelling effects). Until now, the benefits of diagnosing hypertension have been far more reported than the harms. To obtain the net result of the preventive interventions for cardiovascular disease, such as diagnosing and treating mild hypertension, assessing benefits and harms in the most comprehensive way possible is necessary, including the psychosocial consequences of labelling. When measuring psychosocial consequences of labelling hypertension, a questionnaire with high content validity and adequate psychometric properties is needed. Objectives: The aim of this study was to describe the psychometric parameters of face and content-validated pool of items. Other objectives were also to screen the item pool by using Rasch model analysis and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) for identifying such items with sufficient fit to the hypothesised models. Methods: We surveyed the pool of items as a draft questionnaire to Brazilians recruited via social networks, sending e-mails, WhatsApp{\textregistered} messages and posting on Facebook{\textregistered}. The inclusion criteria were to be older than 18 years old, to be healthy and to have only hypertension. We used Rasch model analysis to screen the item pool, discarding items that did not fit the hypothesised domain. We searched for local dependence and differential item functioning. We used CFA to confirm the derived measurement models and complementarily assessed reliability using Cronbach{\textquoteright}s coefficient alpha. Results: The validation sample consisted of 798 respondents. All 798 respondents completed Part I, whereas 285 (35.7%)—those with hypertension—completed Part II. A condition-specific questionnaire with high content validity and adequate psychometric properties was developed for people labelled with hypertension. This measure is called {\textquoteleft}Consequences of Labelling Hypertension Questionnaire{\textquoteright} and covers the psychosocial consequences of labelling hypertension in two parts, encompassing a total of 71 items in 15 subscales and 11 single items. Conclusion: We developed a tool that can be used in future research involving hypertension, especially in scenarios of screening, prevention, population strategies and in intervention studies. Future use and testing of the questionnaire may still be required.",
keywords = "Hypertension, Patient-reported outcome, Psychometric properties, Psychosocial consequences",
author = "Gyuricza, {J{\'a}nos Valery} and Christensen, {Karl Bang} and d{\textquoteright}Oliveira, {Ana Fl{\'a}via Pires Lucas} and John Brodersen",
year = "2021",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1186/s41687-021-00291-4",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
journal = "Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes",
issn = "2509-8020",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Psychometric properties of a condition-specific PROM for the psychosocial consequences of Labelling hypertension by using Rasch analysis

AU - Gyuricza, János Valery

AU - Christensen, Karl Bang

AU - d’Oliveira, Ana Flávia Pires Lucas

AU - Brodersen, John

PY - 2021/12

Y1 - 2021/12

N2 - Background: A previous qualitative assessment of the psychosocial consequences of labelling hypertension describes the diagnosis of hypertension as a labelling event with potential unintended negative long-term psychosocial consequences (labelling effects). Until now, the benefits of diagnosing hypertension have been far more reported than the harms. To obtain the net result of the preventive interventions for cardiovascular disease, such as diagnosing and treating mild hypertension, assessing benefits and harms in the most comprehensive way possible is necessary, including the psychosocial consequences of labelling. When measuring psychosocial consequences of labelling hypertension, a questionnaire with high content validity and adequate psychometric properties is needed. Objectives: The aim of this study was to describe the psychometric parameters of face and content-validated pool of items. Other objectives were also to screen the item pool by using Rasch model analysis and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) for identifying such items with sufficient fit to the hypothesised models. Methods: We surveyed the pool of items as a draft questionnaire to Brazilians recruited via social networks, sending e-mails, WhatsApp® messages and posting on Facebook®. The inclusion criteria were to be older than 18 years old, to be healthy and to have only hypertension. We used Rasch model analysis to screen the item pool, discarding items that did not fit the hypothesised domain. We searched for local dependence and differential item functioning. We used CFA to confirm the derived measurement models and complementarily assessed reliability using Cronbach’s coefficient alpha. Results: The validation sample consisted of 798 respondents. All 798 respondents completed Part I, whereas 285 (35.7%)—those with hypertension—completed Part II. A condition-specific questionnaire with high content validity and adequate psychometric properties was developed for people labelled with hypertension. This measure is called ‘Consequences of Labelling Hypertension Questionnaire’ and covers the psychosocial consequences of labelling hypertension in two parts, encompassing a total of 71 items in 15 subscales and 11 single items. Conclusion: We developed a tool that can be used in future research involving hypertension, especially in scenarios of screening, prevention, population strategies and in intervention studies. Future use and testing of the questionnaire may still be required.

AB - Background: A previous qualitative assessment of the psychosocial consequences of labelling hypertension describes the diagnosis of hypertension as a labelling event with potential unintended negative long-term psychosocial consequences (labelling effects). Until now, the benefits of diagnosing hypertension have been far more reported than the harms. To obtain the net result of the preventive interventions for cardiovascular disease, such as diagnosing and treating mild hypertension, assessing benefits and harms in the most comprehensive way possible is necessary, including the psychosocial consequences of labelling. When measuring psychosocial consequences of labelling hypertension, a questionnaire with high content validity and adequate psychometric properties is needed. Objectives: The aim of this study was to describe the psychometric parameters of face and content-validated pool of items. Other objectives were also to screen the item pool by using Rasch model analysis and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) for identifying such items with sufficient fit to the hypothesised models. Methods: We surveyed the pool of items as a draft questionnaire to Brazilians recruited via social networks, sending e-mails, WhatsApp® messages and posting on Facebook®. The inclusion criteria were to be older than 18 years old, to be healthy and to have only hypertension. We used Rasch model analysis to screen the item pool, discarding items that did not fit the hypothesised domain. We searched for local dependence and differential item functioning. We used CFA to confirm the derived measurement models and complementarily assessed reliability using Cronbach’s coefficient alpha. Results: The validation sample consisted of 798 respondents. All 798 respondents completed Part I, whereas 285 (35.7%)—those with hypertension—completed Part II. A condition-specific questionnaire with high content validity and adequate psychometric properties was developed for people labelled with hypertension. This measure is called ‘Consequences of Labelling Hypertension Questionnaire’ and covers the psychosocial consequences of labelling hypertension in two parts, encompassing a total of 71 items in 15 subscales and 11 single items. Conclusion: We developed a tool that can be used in future research involving hypertension, especially in scenarios of screening, prevention, population strategies and in intervention studies. Future use and testing of the questionnaire may still be required.

KW - Hypertension

KW - Patient-reported outcome

KW - Psychometric properties

KW - Psychosocial consequences

U2 - 10.1186/s41687-021-00291-4

DO - 10.1186/s41687-021-00291-4

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 33538939

AN - SCOPUS:85100555787

VL - 5

JO - Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes

JF - Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes

SN - 2509-8020

IS - 1

M1 - 19

ER -

ID: 258099573